DocumentCode
2493908
Title
Dynamic Multipath Onion Routing in Anonymous Peer-To-Peer Overlay Networks
Author
Landsiedel, Olaf ; Pimenidis, Alexis ; Wehrle, Klaus ; Niedermayer, Heiko ; Carle, Georg
Author_Institution
RWTH Aachen Univ., Aachen
fYear
2007
fDate
26-30 Nov. 2007
Firstpage
64
Lastpage
69
Abstract
Although recent years provided many protocols for anonymous routing in overlay networks, they commonly rely on the same communication paradigm: Onion Routing. In Onion Routing a static tunnel through an overlay network is build via layered encryption. All traffic exchanged by its end points is relayed through this tunnel. In contrast, this paper introduces dynamic multipath Onion Routing to extend the static Onion Routing paradigm. This approach allows each packet exchanged between two end points to travel along a different path. To provide anonymity the first half of this path is selected by the sender and the second half by the receiver of the packet. The results are manifold: First, dynamic multipath Onion Routing increases the resilience against threats, especially pattern and timing based analysis attacks. Second, the dynamic paths reduce the impact of misbehaving and overloaded relays. Finally, inspired by Internet routing, the forwarding nodes do not need to maintain any state about ongoing flows and so reduce the complexity of the router. In this paper, we describe the design of our dynamic Multipath Onion RoutEr (MORE) for peer-to-peer overlay networks, and evaluate its performance. Furthermore, we integrate address virtualization to abstract from Internet addresses and provide transparent support for IP applications. Thus, no application-level gateways, proxies or modifications of applications are required to sanitize protocols from network level information. Acting as an IP-datagram service, our scheme provides a substrate for anonymous communication to a wide range of applications using TCP and UDP.
Keywords
Internet; cryptography; peer-to-peer computing; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication security; telecommunication traffic; transport protocols; IP-datagram service; Internet addresses; Internet routing; TCP; UDP; anonymous peer-to-peer overlay networks; dynamic multipath onion routing; layered encryption; network traffic; timing-based analysis attacks; Application virtualization; Cryptography; Internet; Pattern analysis; Peer to peer computing; Relays; Resilience; Routing protocols; Telecommunication traffic; Timing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2007. GLOBECOM '07. IEEE
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1042-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1043-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GLOCOM.2007.20
Filename
4410930
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